Counterphobic attitude

Counterphobic attitude is a response to anxiety that, instead of fleeing the source of fear in the manner of a phobia, actively seeks it out, in the hope of overcoming the original anxiousness.[1]

Contrary to the avoidant personality disorder, the counterphobic represents the less usual, but not totally uncommon, response of seeking out what is feared:[2] codependents may fall into a subcategory of this group, hiding their fears of attachment in over-dependency.[3]

Action

Dare-devil activities are often undertaken in a counterphobic spirit, as a denial of the fears attached to them, which may be only partially successful.[4] Acting out in general may have a counterphobic source,[5] reflecting a false self over-concerned with compulsive doing to preserve a sense of power and control.[6]

Sex is a key area for counterphobic activity, sometimes powering hypersexuality in people who are actually afraid of the objects they believe they love.[7] Adolescents, fearing sex play, may jump over to a kind of spurious full sexuality;[8] adults may overvalue sex to cover an unconscious fear of the harm it may do.[9] Such a counterphobic approach may indeed be socially celebrated[10] in a postmodern vision of sex as gymnastic performance or hygiene,[11] fuelled by what Ken Wilber described as "an exuberant and fearless shallowness".[12]

Traffic accidents have been linked to a counterphobic, manic attitude in the driver.[13]

Language

Julia Kristeva considered that language could be used by the developing child as a counterphobic object,[14] protecting against anxiety and loss.[15]

Ego psychology points out that through the ambiguities of language, the concrete meanings of words may break down the counterphobic attitude and return the child to a state of fear.[16]

Freud

Didier Anzieu saw Freud's theorisation of psychoanalysis as a counterphobic defence against anxiety through intellectualisation: permanently ruminating on the instinctive, emotional world that was the actual object of fear.[17]

Wilhelm Fliess has been seen as playing the role of counterphobic object for Freud during the period of the latter's self-analysis.[18]

Therapy

Otto Fenichel considered that undoing systematised counterphobic defences was only a first step in therapy, needing to be followed by analysis of the original anxiety itself.[19] He also considered that psychological trauma could break down counterphobic defences, with results that "may be very painful for the patient; they are, from a therapeutic point of view, favorable".[20]

David Rapaport emphasised the need for caution and extreme slowness in analyzing counterphobic defences.[21]

Cultural examples

The attraction of horror movies has been seen to lie in a counterphobic impulse.[22]

Actors often have a shy personality, released counterphobically in conditions of performance.[23]

Sick, the documentary on masochistic performance artist Bob Flanagan, discusses the counterphobic attitude of Flanagan, who sought to escape the chronic pain of his cystic fibrosis by engaging in extreme acts of masochism.

As well as many other psychological factors, the concept of people wanting to carry out activities that are labelled as 'prohibited', 'not safe for work', or with a 'do not touch this button'-style label is down to a counter phobic attitude.

See also

References

  1. Otto Fenichel, The Psychoanalytic Theory of Neurosis (1946) p. 480-1
  2. Martin Kantor, The Essential Guide to Overcoming Avoidant Personality Disorder (2010) p. 30
  3. Kantor, p. 36
  4. Salman Akhtar, Comprehensive Dictionary of Psychoanalysis (2009) p. 60
  5. Judy Cooper, Speak of Me as I Am (2011) p. 66
  6. Rosalind Minsky, Psychoanalysis and Gender (1996) p. 122
  7. Fenichel, p. 518
  8. D. W. Winnicott, The Child, the Family, and the Outside World (1973) p. 218
  9. Julia Segal, Melanie Klein (2001) p. 46
  10. Lesley Caldwell ed., Sex and Sexuality (2010) p. 116
  11. Elisabeth Roudinesco, Philosophy in Turbulent Times (2008) p. xi
  12. Ken Wilber, Sex, Ecology, Spirituality (2000) p. 7
  13. Graham P. Bartley, Traffic Accidents (2008) p. 166
  14. Julia Kristeva, Powers of Horror (1982) p. 41
  15. Adam Phillips, On Flirtation (1994) p. 82-3
  16. Selma H. Fraiberg, The Magic Years (1987) p. 123-5
  17. Didier Anzieu, Freud's Self-Analysis (1986) p. 182 and p. 577-581
  18. Lydia Flem, Freud the Man (2003) p. 59
  19. Fenichel, p. 485
  20. Fenichel, p. 549-53
  21. David Rapaport, 'The Autonomy of the Ego', in Glen T. Morris ed., Dimensions of Psychology (nd) p. 14
  22. Robert Newman, Transgressions of Reading (1993) p. 63
  23. Kantor, p. 62

Further reading

External links

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